Accolade
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Accolade | |
|---|---|
| Type | Defunct |
| Founded | 1984 |
| Headquarters | San Jose, California |
| Key people | Alan Miller and Bob Whitehead, founders |
| Industry | Video game development and publishing |
| Products | Star Control, Test Drive, Jack Nicklaus Golf, Hardball, Bubsy |
| Revenue | N/A |
| Employees | N/A |
| Website | www.accolade.com (defunct), www.atari.com |
Accolade was a video game developer and publisher of the 1980s and 1990s. It was founded in 1984 by game industry veterans Alan Miller and Bob Whitehead. Miller and Whitehead founded Accolade after leaving another game developer and publisher they had founded, Activision, the first third-party game developer.
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] Early years
According to legend, Miller and Whitehead named their company "Accolade" because it came before "Activision" alphabetically—implying that Accolade was superior to their previous company. Apparently when forming Activision, they chose that name because it came before "Atari." Later, a new game development company, Acclaim , another company formed from ex-Activision employees, apparently formulated their name because it came before "Accolade." Absolute Entertainment, again, a third company formed from ex-Activision people, ended up being first with the 'first in the alphabet' race.
As the popularity of other systems waned, Accolade focused on PC and console development, including the NES, Mega Drive/Genesis, SNES and PlayStation during those systems' popularity.
All of Accolade's initial titles were developed in-house. But being a publisher as well as a developer, Accolade began to publish titles produced by other developers as well. By the mid-1990s, most of Accolade software development was done by third-party developers.
In 1992, Accolade was involved in a ground-breaking lawsuit regarding console development. Accolade was unhappy with the high development fees Sega and Nintendo were charging. Instead of paying the fees, Accolade reverse engineered the SNES and the Mega Drive/Genesis. Sega sued Accolade over the practice and won an initial injunction, forcing Accolade to remove all Genesis product from store shelves. Accolade, however, won on appeal and reached an out of court settlement with Sega that allowed Accolade to continue building their own Genesis cartridges but as an official licensee.
[edit] Demise
The company had marginal successes during the early 1990s. Bubsy for the Sega Genesis and Super Nintendo sold well and was the companies best-selling game until Test Drive 4 came out in 1997. Star Control 2 for the PC (1992, DOS) is still very well regarded and was one of the highest rated games of its time.
However, beginning in the mid-1990s, Accolade started publishing a variety of games of differing genres which were undistinguished and lacked polish.
During a conference of management and producers, Accolade decided to focus only on sports, action games. Accolade already had several franchises based in these categories. Franchises in the sports genre included HardBall!, Unnecessary Roughness and Jack Nicklaus Golf. In the broad "action" category they had the long-running franchise Test Drive.
Alan Miller left Accolade in 1995; Bob Whitehead had left shortly after the founding of the company. Before Miller left, the position of CEO was taken over by Peter Harris who was placed there by Prudential Investments (Prudential had made a USD$10 million investment in the company). Harris was on the board of directors and was formerly the CEO of FAO Schwartz and after Accolade, became the president of the San Francisco 49ers. Harris left the fate of the company in the hands of game industry neophyte, Jim Barnett. Under Barnett's direction, the company relaunched the successful Test Drive series, began the Test Drive Offroad series and introduced both series to the PlayStation platform.
Accolade did well in its early years, but by the 1990s, Accolade's sales suffered and management was forced to enact several rounds of layoffs. Under Barnett's direction, Accolade continued to flounder as more people were laid off. However, he kept the company afloat long enough to be purchased by French publisher Infogrames in 1999, right after publishing their last game Redline. Accolade, as a game development and publishing entity, quietly ceased to exist after the San Jose office was merged with Infogrammes' other operations and moved to Los Angeles. All of Accolade's assets are now owned by Atari (née Infogrames).
Accolade was located in the heart of Silicon Valley at:
- 5300 Stevens Creek Blvd.
- Suite 500
- San Jose, California 95129
[edit] Games
Accolade was responsible for developing many influential games. Some of the best known and best-selling series include Star Control, Test Drive, Jack Nicklaus Golf, HardBall and Bubsy.
- 4th & Inches 1987
- 4th & Inches Team Construction Disk 1988
- Accolade Comics 1987
- Accolade In Action 1990
- Ace of Aces 1986
- Altered Destiny 1990
- Ballz 1994
- Bar Games 1989
- Barkley: Shut Up and Jam! 1994
- Battle Isle 2 (PC) 1993
- Big Air (PlayStation) 1998
- Blue Angels: Formation Flight Simulation 1989
- Brett Hull Hockey 95 1994
- Bubble Ghost 1987
- Bubsy 3D: Furbitten Planet 1996
- Bubsy II 1994
- Bubsy in: Claws Encounters of the Furred Kind 1993
- Bubsy in: Fractured Furry Tales 1994
- The Cardinal of the Kremlin 1990
- Combat Cars (Sega Genesis) 1994
- Cyclemania (PC) 1994
- The Cycles: International Grand Prix Racing 1989
- Dam Busters 1984
- Day of the Viper 1989
- Deadlock: Planetary Conquest (PC) 1996
- Deadlock II: Shrine Wars (PC) 1998
- Don't Go Alone 1989
- Double Dragon 1988
- The Duel: Test Drive II 1989
- Elvira: Mistress of the Dark 1990
- Elvira II: The Jaws of Cerberus 1991
- Eradicator (PC) 1996
- Fast Break 1988
- Fight Night 1985
- The Game of Harmony 1990
- The Games: Summer Challenge 1991
- The Games: Winter Challenge 1992
- Grand Prix Circuit 1988
- Grand Prix Unlimited 1992
- Gunboat 1990
- Hardball! 1985
- HardBall II 1989
- HardBall III 1992
- HardBall 4 1994
- HardBall 5 1995
- HardBall 6 1998
- HardBall 6 - 2000 Edition 1999
- Hoverforce 1990
- Ishido: The Way of Stones 1990
- Jack Nicklaus 4 1997
- Jack Nicklaus 5 1998
- Jack Nicklaus Golf & Course Design: Signature Edition 1992
- Jack Nicklaus' Greatest 18 Holes of Major Championship Golf 1988
- Jack Nicklaus' Unlimited Golf & Course Design 1990
- Killed Until Dead 1986
- Law of the West 1985
- Les Manley in: Lost in L.A. 1992
- Les Manley in: Search for the King 1990
- Mean 18 1986
- Mike Ditka Ultimate Football 1991
- Mini-Putt 1987
- Pelé II: World Tournament Soccer 1994
- PO'ed 1995
- Power at Sea 1987
- Project: Space Station 1985
- Psi-5 Trading Company 1986
- Rack 'Em 1988
- Redline 1999
- Road & Car 1991
- Serve & Volley 1988
- Slave Zero (PC) 1999
- Snoopy's Game Club 1992
- Speed Racer in The Challenge of Racer X
- Star Control 1990
- Star Control II 1992
- Star Control 1 & 2 CD Compendium
- Star Control 3 1996
- Star Control Collection
- Steel Thunder
- Stratego
- Strike Aces
- SunDog: Frozen Legacy
- Super Bubsy
- Test Drive
- Test Drive 4 (PlayStation, PC)
- Test Drive 5 (PlayStation, PC)
- Test Drive II Car Disk: Musclecars
- Test Drive II Car Disk: The Supercars
- Test Drive II Scenery Disk: California Challenge
- Test Drive II Scenery Disk: European Challenge
- Test Drive II: The Collection
- Test Drive III: The Passion
- Test Drive Off-Road 3
- Test Drive: Off-Road
- Test Drive: Off-Road 2
- The Third Courier
- TKO
- The Train: Escape to Normandy
- Turrican
- Universal Soldier
- Unnecessary Roughness
- Unnecessary Roughness '95 (PC, Sega Genesis)
- Unnecessary Roughness '96 (PC)
- Waxworks (Amiga, DOS)
- Warp Speed (Sega Genesis)
- Winter Challenge
- Zero Tolerance (Sega Genesis)
- Zyconix
[edit] External links
- Accolade profile from MobyGames
- The Underdogs' company profile for Accolade
- Adventureland: Accolade's adventure games
- Sega vs Accolade details
- Accolade at World of Spectrumca:Accolade (publicadora de videojocs)
cs:Accolade de:Accolade it:Accolade

